America’s abortion debate is a window on one of the country’s
deepest spiritual crises. When we see injustice, brutality and sin on
this scale, we rightly get angry at the evil. How can we ensure we’re
experiencing godly, righteous anger instead of destructive, carnal
anger?

Isabelle Limbach/iStock/Thinkstock

The sin of murder through abortion twists the lives of those affected and the twits the moral fiber of a people.

Why should abortion—and the merchandising of the body parts of murdered babies—ﬁll us with godly, righteous anger?
Every day I read at least some news, so I spend my fair share of
time feeling sad or shocked or simply perplexed at the things seemingly
regular people do to other seemingly regular people. Thankfully,
information saturation hasn’t numbed me to human suﬀering, and I can
still get shocked and upset by what I see. I really wish there was
enough good news to oﬀset the bad, and I really wish I could walk away
from a news report feeling happy and hopeful for everyone whose stories I
read and hear about. It doesn’t happen very often.\

Godly, righteous anger is about justice , not revenge.

Every now and again I read a story that goes beyond the everyday
shock and awe at the darker sides of human nature. You probably had the
same reaction when you read about it or watched the videos that were
shared around. I’m talking about the revelation that representatives of
Planned Parenthood, the United States’ largest abortion provider, were
caught on video bartering over body parts from aborted children.
Sure, I was shocked. I felt stunned and sad. But I felt another
emotion as well—something deeper and rawer than sadness or shock. I was angry.
Was it right for me to be angry? Should you be angry about abortion?
Is it possible to be angry in a godly way? I’ll come back to America’s
abortion crisis, but ﬁrst let’s lay some groundwork on the complex
concept of righteous, godly anger.

God’s anger is righteous

We don’t often think of anger as a Christian emotion—and for the
most part, that’s probably a good thing. Christians are to be deﬁned by
their relationship with God the Father and Jesus Christ. They are
measured by the character of Jesus Himself. And He perfectly modeled
self-control, patience and mercy. But He was also capable of anger when
the situation called for it.
All four Gospels record Jesus’ anger at the moneychangers in the
temple for profaning God’s holy house. Maybe when you think about our
Savior shouting, ﬂipping over tables and using a makeshift whip to drive
animals out of the temple it makes you uncomfortable. Maybe you have a
diﬃcult time reconciling this very real image of Jesus with other very
real images of Jesus defending the weak, healing the sick and taking up
the cause of the poor.
If we honestly and humbly read the Bible, though, we’ll see that
this instance of Jesus’ life is 100 percent, entirely consistent with
His righteous character as it’s displayed throughout the Bible. The
author of Hebrews gives us an essential truth about Jesus: He is “the
same yesterday, today and forever” (Hebrews 13:8).
That means the same godly character that produced anger at the temple
moneychangers also produces great mercy every day. The same godly
character that commands care for widows and orphans commands justice and
judgment on those who reject God’s way.Psalms 7:12
tells us, “God is angry with the wicked every day.” It should come as no
surprise then that God is very angry at the senseless killing of
helpless children. We shouldn’t be shocked that God is angry that people
are proﬁting from the killing of His precious children. We also
shouldn’t be afraid to feel some of that anger ourselves and to “sigh
and cry” over the evil actions we see (Ezekiel 9:4).
When we read about callous violence and injustice, it’s right to be
angry. We need to tread carefully however. Anger is a powerful and
potentially very destructive emotion that, in the wrong context, wrong
frame of mind and wrong spirit, can wreck our spiritual lives and cause
us to hurt others.

Is your anger righteous?

Christianity is all about becoming more and more like God as Jesus
modeled His righteous character for us to follow. It’s important that we
keep close tabs on our thoughts and actions to make sure that we’re
following His lead and not the pulls of the ﬂesh and allowing human
nature to dictate our responses. That’s why we need to constantly
examine ourselves to make sure we’re staying on the “straight and
narrow.” How do we know if we’re right or wrong in being angry
at something?
Many scriptures show us there’s a vast gulf separating righteous and
unrighteous anger. In the very beginning of mankind’s history, Cain’s
anger drove him to murder his own brother (Genesis 4:8).
Unfettered anger—or misdirected anger—can lead us to great sin. God
Himself tells us that it is good to be angry as long as we don’t sin
through misdirected, unrestrained anger (Ephesians 4:26).
So what is godly anger? One condition of righteous anger is that it should be directed toward sin.
Just as Jesus was furious at the profaning of His Father’s house, we
should hate sin and the negative consequences it brings on
people—especially the innocent or helpless.
Proverbs 6 lists seven things that God actively hates. The common
denominator is sin and its eﬀects on people: “These six things the Lord
hates, yes, seven are an abomination to Him: A proud look, a lying
tongue, hands that shed innocent blood, a heart that devises wicked
plans, feet that are swift in running to evil, a false witness who
speaks lies, and one who sows discord among brethren” (Proverbs 6:16-19).
A second aspect of godly anger is that it isn’t quickly or easily kindled. God’s anger at sin isn’t explosive. He’s not a “walking time bomb” like some people are.
No one likes to be around other people who have a reputation for
their quick tempers. Sometimes people with explosive anger can be very
dangerous. God Himself testiﬁes to His slow temper: “The Lord, the Lord
God, compassionate and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in
lovingkindness and truth” (Exodus 34:6).
If we want to cultivate only righteous anger, we need to follow His lead, being “slow to wrath” (James 1:19).
In fact, this quality of God is one of the fruits of His Holy Spirit
that develops in us as we grow close to God and He begins producing His
character within us. Paul wrote that “the fruit of the Spirit is love,
joy, peace, longsuﬀering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control” (Galatians 5:22-23, emphasis added). Notice here self-control —another essential trait of those who don’t sin in anger.
A third factor in godly, righteous anger is that it’s about justice, not revenge. Do we get angry at people
and hope for the time when they “get theirs”? If I’m being honest, I
have to admit that sometimes my anger over horriﬁc events like the mass
slaughter of infants gets me going down this path.
But that human desire for punishment isn’t even remotely related to God’s promise of true justice
for the innocent and the guilty. Paul tells us that we should “give
place to wrath, for it is written, ‘Vengeance is Mine, I will repay,’
says the Lord” (Romans 12:19). Wait for God’s time of judgment and justice.
God will ultimately deal with evildoers. And it helps to always keep
in mind what God is well aware of—that people are misled in their
thinking and actions by a powerful malevolent spirit—Satan the devil
(see 1 John 5:19 and “An Evil Spirit World: Where Did It Come From? ”).

Why be angry about abortion?

Back to the Planned Parenthood controversy: Why should abortion—and
the merchandising of the body parts of murdered babies—ﬁll us with
godly, righteous anger?
Consider that our society—our culture—is murdering, wholesale, the
most precious and helpless among us. Psalm 127 tells us that children
are a gift from God. They are precious to Him and should be to us.
They’re not a burden, not a negative consequence, and certainly not a
“parasite” in the womb as some characterize the unborn.
To say that we can choose to, at any point in a nine-month window of
time, kill the next generation of the human family—all potential
members of the divine family of God—is a great evil and a curse. We
should be furious at the very notion.
Let’s be honest: Almost all abortions, by some estimates more than
99 percent, are performed for the reason of convenience. The baby was
conceived at an “inconvenient time” for the parents. No one has yet
explained why a child can be given the death penalty because of the
circumstances of their conception.
A fairly conservative estimate—based on numbers collected by the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention—puts the number of legal
abortions performed in the United States since the U.S. Supreme Court legalized abortion in 1973 at approximately 51 million.
That’s 51 million lives cut short, 51 million untold stories,
immeasurable potential thrown away and sacriﬁced to the false god of
convenience and personal choice. Does that make you angry? It should.

Godly anger should lead to repentance

It should make you angry because, as Ezekiel warned Israel, sin twists people’s lives (Ezekiel 7:13, New Living Translation). The sin of murder through abortion twists the lives of those aﬀected. And on a bigger scale, the widespread acceptance and support of abortion and organizations like Planned Parenthood twists the moral ﬁber
of a people. If America’s national conscience can tolerate the
dismembering of a child and the merchandising of its body parts, what can’t it tolerate?
There’s one last element to godly, righteous anger, and it’s the
most important element. The anger that comes from God should convict us to change and become more like Him. It should motivate us to ﬁx our problems and turn toward the mercy and love God desperately wants to extend to us.
God doesn’t want people to suﬀer the bad consequences that sin
produces, and He doesn’t want any nation to suﬀer these consequences
either. God is patient and “not willing that any should perish but that
all should come to repentance” (2 Peter 3:8).
It’s not too late for those whose lives have been twisted by the sin
of abortion to repent and live by God’s high standard of respect for
the sanctity of life. And, while it would require a great miracle, it’s
also not too late for America and other countries where abortion is
legal to experience a nationwide repentance and to turn away from
this sin.
God is waiting with arms wide open to accept those who turn away from sin to seek Him. Will America respond? Will you?

Milan Nick Bizic was born in Wheeling, West Virginia. He was raised in a
small community in Eastern Ohio, about an hour from Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania. He is a graduate of Ambassador Bible Center, where he
attended during the class of 2006. He also has
a degree in computer science from Belmont College, and a degree in
communication from Ohio University’s Scripps College of Communication
and Journalism.